A virtue-signaling event: Israel and Palestine

This diary is about virtue-signaling.

Virtue-signaling is empty because it doesn't do anything about the situation supposedly connected to the virtue-signaling. It therefore has no consequences. No Black lives were saved because Nancy Pelosi dressed up in kente cloth.

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Moreover, Nancy Pelosi dressing up in kente cloth did not stop the embezzlement of money from Black Lives Matter.

Virtue-signaling serves two important functions: 1) It is performed in front of a large audience, and 2) it makes the virtue-signaler feel good about him- or herself.

It's clear why people are drawn to virtue-signaling. Present-day global society is characterized by what Cornelius Castoriadis called "heteronomy." What "heteronomy" means is that we do not make our own laws; rather, the laws which constrain our behavior are imposed externally, through forces such as "money," the pursuit of which guides our adult lives, or a "political class," which makes our laws under the watchful eyes of a shadow government and donor class while pretending that we selected them. Virtue-signaling, then, creates a false (thus briefly appealing) sense of empowerment in its vain attempts to place events caused by out-of-control agencies under the control of "public opinion." We might, for instance, say "I stand with Israel" or "I stand with Palestine," as genocide is committed in Gaza. All of this activity is, unfortunately, empty, the first matter-at-hand being that Palestine is merely the geographic location which the government of Israel currently occupies as a predatory settler state. It is, however, revealing, since virtue-signaling serves as a mode of public confession.

The example of virtue-signaling that I will examine here is Maurice Isserman's essay in The Nation magazine, "Why I Just Quit DSA." It says here that Isserman was one of DSA's founding members. I will offer a reading of this piece for insights about the nature of virtue-signaling.

The first thing that needs to be said is that the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) is an organization whose main purpose is virtue-signaling. In word, DSA pretends to be socialist; but in behavior DSA is a support organization for the Democratic Party, and the Democratic Party is a commodity rented by a wealthy political donor class. So the DSA performs a task which is the opposite of proletarian class struggle, ostensibly the primary motor of socialist politics.

What this means for Isserman is that his act of quitting is the ultimate piece of virtue-signaling. The point of virtue-signaling -- and here I say it in a smirking, Erving Goffman sort of way -- is to assert that one is signaling behind real, and not fake, virtue. Isserman is, then, telling us all that he is now too pure for DSA. He tells us his reason for doing so at the end of the first paragraph:

I left to protest the DSA leadership’s politically and morally bankrupt response to the horrific Hamas October 7 anti-Jewish pogrom that took the lives of 1,400 people, mostly civilians, and saw over 200 hostages carried off to Gaza, both groups of victims including children and infants.

News flash for Isserman: as members of an organization of Democrats pretending to be socialists, political and moral bankruptcy is the best DSA participants can do. Congratulations! You quit.

Isserman spills some ink discussing "entryism":

What do I mean by “entryists”? In left-wing parlance, the term refers to tightly organized groups who, without sharing the beliefs of larger and more loosely organized bodies, join and proceed to either wreck or, where possible, capture them for ends at odds with the spirit and purpose of the original members.

I realize that this rhetoric was once popular with SDS, of which Isserman was briefly a member back in those Roaring Sixties, but -- really -- this is all ad hominem stuff. Rather than engage the issue, those who accuse others of "entryism" place organizational purity above the question of what is to be done.

Isserman then relates a history of DSA, most importantly of its recent new influx of members:

Unlike my generation, for whom the overriding issue of the late 1960s was opposition to the war in Vietnam, most of DSA’s new members were attracted to the organization by its proposals for substantial, vital, and above all realizable domestic reforms (Medicare for All, the Green New Deal, student debt relief, tenants’ rights, etc).

None of this stuff will actually be supported by the Democratic Party except as a form of virtue-signaling, however. (And how I would love to stand for single-payer!)

In this history, however, Isserman tells how "entryists" ruined it all for him, with an invocation of "Israel’s right to continued existence" at the end. This phrasing is far too common. Nobody can in fact do anything about Israel's right to continued existence, seeing as Israel is guaranteed massive yearly subsidies by the United States and is a nation-state possessing nuclear weapons. The point of invoking that phrase, then, is to virtue-signal for Israel's ability to do anything it wants, which at the current moment is genocide.

(That having been said, denouncing Hamas would be another piece of virtue-signaling, not a horrible one to be sure, but, still, with no consequences.)

Isserman then invokes Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, stating that "DSA’s National Political Committee did not agree with the two most prominent democratic socialists in American public life." But this is signaling behind people who aren't virtuous. Sanders and AOC's endorsements of Joe Biden's re-election bid should tell you all you need to know about them.

The article concludes by mentioning some celebrity "democratic socialists." My argument, here, must conclude too. In the same Nation issue there is a piece titled "Biden’s Israel-Palestine Policy Could Cost Him the Election." In this regard, it must be said that even though the author of this essay admits they want Joe Biden to be re-elected, refusing to vote for Joe Biden would be something we could all do that would NOT be virtue-signaling, because -- well, if we all did it, it would have consequences.

And if you are going to virtue-signal (smirks), be sure to signal behind something that is actually virtuous.

There are a few exceptions.

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Cassiodorus's picture

BDS_Movement_logo.png

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"the Democratic Party is not 'left'." -- Sabrina Salvati

janis b's picture

I was happy, but unsurprised, that my favourite living comedian keeps it real ...

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Cassiodorus's picture

@janis b As far as I know, Israel has forced nearly all of Gaza to die of dehydration. Nobody has reported upon this death toll -- it should be very high. What I hear is about 360 bombs per day. Maybe there are Hamas survivors deep below the ground, as suggested in certain reports, who have stores of water and food. I don't know. It was reported on KPFA's "Flashpoints" that one of the relief trucks allowed in was full of coffins. So yeah.

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"the Democratic Party is not 'left'." -- Sabrina Salvati

janis b's picture

@Cassiodorus

and the survivors in Gaza receive sustenance from somewhere and someone, and the hostages safely released.

Is that really too much to ask?

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is the authoritarian nature of virtue signalling. When someone says that "Israel has a right to exist" he is usually also saying you cannot say "but so do the Palestinians". When Israel does it it's self defense, when Palestinians do it it's terrorism, so STFU!

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On to Biden since 1973

Cassiodorus's picture

@doh1304 for the not-virtuous.

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"the Democratic Party is not 'left'." -- Sabrina Salvati

I suppose this is virtue signaling among the war mongers to show one's creds for going to war. I guess the ultimate pro-war virtue signaler are what used to be called chickenhawks.

----

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@MrWebster

you can't win unless you fight or
you only lose when you don't fight
winning is everything!

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@QMS

a cartoon caricature of the news
good versus evil (as defined)
black versus white (who's side are you on?)
there is no nuance or gray areas in this presentation

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Cassiodorus's picture

@MrWebster that war is virtuous.

Ya know, at least Dubya promoted virtues with his warmongering. With Iraq the US was supposed to replace Saddam's dictatorship with neoliberal paradise, and with Afghanistan the troops were ostensibly preventing the reactionary Taliban from seizing power. Even with AFRICOM, Obama's favorite war, the US was supposedly combating terrorism. With Vietnam the dreamed-of utopia to be arranged through war was even more elaborate: the Strategic Hamlet program, a product of Michigan State University.

Today, with Antony Blinken, it's like "we control the world already. Dare us to make war upon you!" Ukraine was previously "defending democracy," but that didn't last long. Now it's a "good investment." And friends of mine don't think America is in decline!

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"the Democratic Party is not 'left'." -- Sabrina Salvati

janis b's picture

@MrWebster

was a very surreal, and physically revolting listen.

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has "virtue signalling" replaced politics and economics entirely in our country. Depending on what you care about, one side or the other will pander to you, and commercial interests will lull you, and the media will endlessly analyze shades of gray.

The US seems designed to run on illusion today, and we choose our government on a moral version of three card Monte. I guess that's where the money is.

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TheOtherMaven's picture

@Snode

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There is no justice. There can be no peace.

Cassiodorus's picture

@Snode once wrote a piece in which she discussed "publics" -- rather than assuming that there was just one thing called "the public," she argued that there were a number of different publics, each with its own distinctive identity. Fraser argued there were two basic types of publics: weak publics, who merely have opinions without having power, and strong publics, who make decisions. So, for instance, the mass public (under most conditions) is an example of a weak public, and Congress (under most conditions) is an example of a strong public.

So we can say that when the weak publics do virtue-signaling, we can say "that's what they do," and when the strong publics virtue-signal, they are obviously pandering.

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"the Democratic Party is not 'left'." -- Sabrina Salvati

@Cassiodorus I was going to go on about special interests and client groups and divisions. Thing is there are 2 groups. Those with money and power, and us without. We're told we're equal, we are as good as any citizen of the USA. We think we're the good guys. So we buy into the idea we can fix what's wrong, and the virtue signalers tell us now it'll be different. It won't be different because the people with money and power made it this way. Whatever situation we're presented with will be answered with the same old dog and pony show with a good dose of let's you and him fight.

My only hope is that it's becoming clear the politicals are more and more running on stupidity, and it's really starting to show, and the wealthy are becoming more and more untouchable for their actions. Somethings got to give.

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Cassiodorus's picture

@Snode is a ground-clearing. Alastair Crooke: "only if there is a catastrophic situation might we start to see the prospect of a sustainable political solution emerging at the end of it."

In that vein, I'd like to see more empowering diaries here at caucus99percent. But every time I think I've seen something that points the way forward, I later take a step back toward a "wait and see" position.

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"the Democratic Party is not 'left'." -- Sabrina Salvati

@Cassiodorus so cynical. But I bought into Clinton, then Hopey Changey and finally Bernie.

I can't see a way forward. I don't see how people pulled together enough to get through the depression and ww2 while still having great differences in thinking. There was a "we're all in this together" thinking, and maybe they were together. If there were a depression today, we would suffer, and the well off would skate. They've protected themselves. If there's a war we would pay for it in all ways, not them. We get to choose which magic pony they throw up every 4 years, while the real actions of government hum along without a thought. I would hate to be young today, because now will be "their good old days". How bad do things have to get before we can say enough?

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Cassiodorus's picture

@Snode -- is that too much of present-day politics is about how to virtue-signal in the appropriate manner. Make sure your bs is the right bs you know -- very important, very important (coughs). That seems to have been what this guy Maurice Isserman was after when he resigned from the Democratic (Party) Socialists of America.

Interestingly enough, people are getting fired in America for sending the wrong virtue signals. ('Course, in the UK, well...) This could backfire. I can easily imagine young professionals putting it on their resumes: "was fired for exercising 1st Amendment rights."

How bad do things have to get before we can say enough?

We may have to endure a period in which we have no freedom of speech. But, if you believe what Alastair Crooke is saying, things are getting worse very quickly, so it shouldn't be long.

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"the Democratic Party is not 'left'." -- Sabrina Salvati

Pluto's Republic's picture

@Cassiodorus

...successfully at some point in the future, once they are finally fed up with the economic and social abuses they suffer?

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
Cassiodorus's picture

@Pluto's Republic What I envision is that at some point in the process of degradation people will figure out how to act politically without merely virtue-signaling. And that way lies an actual confrontation with politics and with the question "what should we do?"

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"the Democratic Party is not 'left'." -- Sabrina Salvati

@Cassiodorus to me politics was the people steering where their government moves in the framework of democracy and the constitution. Politics was dynamic. Now, politics are an obstacle, slow walking or not acting on what the people want. Poll after poll show citizens that are more generous and caring about how they want to be treated while politicians are indifferent or hostile to those sentiments. I can only see this is the way both sides essentially agree on the state of our country or there would be change in the direction the people want. The aggressive right, the powerless left, no matter who won the election it always drifts rightward, towards money and power. It's why we have to sacrifice a better life for multi million dollar weapons or another yacht for Bezos or Musk.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

@Cassiodorus

Sorry. Corrected.

Thank you for your response.
I've hoped the people might act for a long time.
But they seem satisfied to blame each other for their misfortune.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
Cassiodorus's picture

@Pluto's Republic but they discover soon thereafter that what they can primarily do is virtue-signal.

https://www.cbsnews.com/losangeles/news/students-across-socal-walkout-in...

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"the Democratic Party is not 'left'." -- Sabrina Salvati